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Welcome to the
St Francis Xavier’s RC
Primary School
Special Educational Needs
Information Page
On the next few pages, you will be able to find out how we help children
at our school who may need additional support to be the best that they
can be.
There is also information about the support offered by the Local
Authority, known as ‘the Local Offer’.
(This format is a first draft and we would welcome feedback about how the information is
presented and if there is anything that could be made clearer. We have tried to make it easy
to follow and not to use too much jargon, but there is a lot of new information that it is
important to share with you as parents and carers. The information will be constantly
reviewed but if you have any comments then please let us know - contact details are on the
next page.)
Contact Details
Mrs C Darcy (Special Educational Needs Coordinator)
Email: [email protected]
Mrs D Pearce - Head Teacher (for Behaviour / Pastoral concerns)
Email: [email protected]
School Telephone Number: (01432) 273941
The Local Offer - information for families on special educational
needs and disabilities provided by Herefordshire Council
About the Local Offer
The Children and Families Act (2014) requires all local councils to set out a 'local offer' of
the support available to assist children and young people, aged from birth to 25 years of
age (and their families) who are disabled and/or have special educational needs.
The local offer should include information about:1. Education, health and social care services from birth to 25 years of age
2. Eligibility criteria to access specialist support services
3. The support arrangements available to help you access the services you need
4. How to make a complaint
The Local Offer is a one-stop-shop for parents, carers, family members and practitioners
working with families to find the information they want about support and services for
children with special educational needs and disabilities.
Local Offer Link Click here to view the Herefordshire’s Local Offer
A Graduated Response
St Francis Xavier’s RC Primary School has
adopted a graduated response to meet the
needs of pupils with Special Educational
Needs and/or Disabilities (SEND) which is in
line with the policy of the Local Authority
and the new Code of Practice (July 2014).
The following four slides outline how the
graduated response works in our school and
what it means for you and your child.
Stage 1
What will school do?
Initially your child’s
needs will be identified
by the class teacher as
part of the rigorous,
whole-school
monitoring cycle.
If they are falling
behind the level
expected for children
their age or they are
not making the
progress expected,
appropriate provision
will be made for them.
How will you be
involved?
What will this mean for
your child?
This will be discussed
with you at the earliest
opportunity, either at
parent consultation
evenings or you may be
asked to come into
school for an additional
meeting with your
child’s class teacher.
At this stage, your child
may be offered additional
support in the form of an
intervention designed to
accelerate progress for
pupils who require a
‘boost’ in their learning.
This should enable them to
make progress towards
expected outcomes. Not
all children who take part
in these interventions will
be identified as having SEN
at this stage.
Stage 2
What will school do?
If, following targeted
support, your child has
still not made sufficient
progress, their class
teacher will consult
with the school’s
Special Educational
Needs Coordinator
(SENCO). She will offer
advice on how to
support your child
further and may carry
out further
assessments to identify
any possible barriers to
learning.
How will you be
involved?
You will be given an
opportunity to meet
with the SENCO. This is
a useful time to discuss
any concerns you might
have and to explore any
further assessments
that might be useful.
If you agree to further
assessments being
carried out, you will be
invited back at a later
date to discuss the
outcomes of these and
how they might impact
on future provision for
your child.
What will this mean for
your child?
If you have agreed to further
assessments, these will be carried
out as soon as possible.
Information gathered about your
child, including their views about
their own learning, will be used to
provide an individual learning plan
for your child. This information
may be recorded as part of the
class profile/provision map or may
be written as an individual
provision map, depending on the
level and type of need.
Depending on the outcome of any
assessments, with your
permission, your child may be
placed on the school’s list for
children who are receiving SEN
Support.
Stage 3
What will school do?
As part of the review
process, when it is clear
that specific support
has been delivered but
has still not resulted in
your child making
satisfactory progress to
meet national
expectations (or be on
track to do so), the
SENCO will consider
making arrangements
for a referral to an
outside specialist to
gather further
information e.g. an
educational
psychologist.
How will you be
involved?
What will this mean for
your child?
You will be invited to a
meeting to review your
child’s provision and
progress. A referral to
an outside agency will
be discussed and, if it is
agreed that this is the
best course of action,
you will be asked for
your permission to
allow the school to do
this. You will usually be
invited to meet with
the member of the
team who comes into
school to work with
your child.
Your child will be assessed
by the outside agency who
will usually give the school
a list of recommendations
to follow. At this stage,
these will be discussed
with you and your child
and will usually be written
into an Individual
Provision Map.
Progress against specific
targets will be reviewed
frequently as part of the
‘assess- plan- do- review’
cycle.
By this stage, children are
usually placed on a list for
children who receive SEN
Support.
Stage 4
What will school do?
How will you be
involved?
What will this mean for
your child?
What happens when
expert advice has been
sought and followed
with rigour, over a
period of time, and still
your child has made
less than expected
progress?
In such cases
consideration will be
given to requesting an
assessment for an
Education, Health and
Care plan (EHCP).
Further details about
EHCPs are given on the
next page.
You will have been
involved in the ‘assessplan-do-review’ cycle
since your child’s needs
were identified by the
class teacher. This
stage is no different
and you will be
involved in every step
of the process.
Provision will still carry on
while the assessment is
made. Your child will be
asked for their views in the
same way that they have
been involved in their own
provision previously.
Further assessments may
need to be carried out for
the Local Authority.
Education, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs)
Education, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs) are replacing Statements
of Special Educational Needs over the next three years. ‘The
purpose of an EHCP is to make special educational provision to
meet the special educational needs of the child or young person, to
secure the best possible outcomes for them across education,
health and social care and, as they get older, prepare them for
adulthood.’
SEN Code of Practice 2014 (9.2)
An education, health and care needs assessment for a child or
young person can be requested by:•the child’s parent
•a young person over the age of 16 but under the age of 25
•a person acting on behalf of a school or post-16 institution (ideally
with the knowledge and agreement of the parent or young person,
where possible).
Further advice can be sought from school, the Local Authority and
the Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Information Advice
and Support Service (SENDIAS).
If you want to approach the Local Authority directly to make a request for
an Education, Health and Care Plan, there is a link on the third page of this
presentation. Alternatively, you can ring the SEN Team on:
Telephone:01432 260869
Email: [email protected]
You can find additional, impartial support and advice from the
Herefordshire Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Information and
Advice Service (SENDIAS) which was formerly known as the Parent
Partnership Service.
Telephone: 01432 260955
Email: [email protected]
The Code of Practice (2014) has identified four broad
areas of need for schools to use to review and
manage provision for children who require special
educational provision, that is, in addition to the
Quality First Teaching that all children will receive
from their class teachers:1.
2.
3.
4.
Communication and Interaction
Cognition and Learning
Social, emotional and mental health difficulties
Sensory and/or physical needs
The following pages describe some of the ways in
which we might support each area…
Communication and Interaction
• Interventions from the Speech and Language Service
• Implementation of their programmes by trained TAs
• Use of ‘Black Sheep Press’ auditory memory materials
• Communicate in Print (Symbols) to aid comprehension
• Memory training programme
• Talk Boost Programme
• Teaching Talking Programme
Staff trained in: Elklan Speech and Language Programme/
Talk Boost/Teaching Talking
Outside agencies: Speech and Language Therapy Service
(SALT), Educational Psychologist
Cognition and Learning
• Small guided group support by teacher/TA or SENCO.
• Catch Up Literacy
• Direct Phonics
• RWI 1:1 Phonics Tutoring and Freshstart
• Individualised one to one reading/writing sessions with the
SENCO
• Multi Sensory Learning Structured Literacy Programme
• Catch Up Numeracy /Springboard Maths
• Wave 3 Maths Intervention
Staff trained in:
OCR Certificate for Teachers of Learners with SpLD
CCET (Certificate of Competence in Educational Testing – validated by
the British Psychological Society)
Catch Up Literacy and Numeracy Programmes
Read Write Inc
Outside agencies: Educational Psychologist
Social, Emotional and Mental Health Difficulties
• Use of school’s behaviour policy and PSHE policy
• Social Skills Programme – Time to Talk/Socially Speaking
• Home/school link book
• 1:1 pastoral support programmes
• Alternative curriculum provision, where necessary
• 1:1 support, where appropriate, for personal care issues
• ‘Start of day’ sessions to ease home/school transition
• Designated TA at play time and lunchtime
• Play Leaders at play time
• Support for parents (Triple P parenting programme)
Staff trained in:
Positive Handling Training (Team Teach)
Outside agencies:
Educational Psychologist, Behaviour Team, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service
(CAMHS), Child Development Centre (CDC), School Counselling Sessions, School Nurse,
Phoenix (Bereavement Service), Positive Parenting Groups
Sensory and/or Physical Needs
• 1:1 support sessions from the OT/Physio teams
• Sessions planned by OT/Physio teams and delivered by TA
• Motor Skills group sessions – using Motor Skills United and Pindora’s Box
resources
• Specialist equipment – wedges, desk slopes, pencil grips etc
• Soundfield system (in some classrooms)
• Visual support materials (Braille machine, visualiser etc) on loan from the support
services
• Ipad – to support learning for those with physical difficulties
Staff trained in:
The use of Braille with visually impaired learners
Outside agencies:
Child Development Centre (CDC)
The Kite Centre – Occupational Therapy and Physiotherapy Teams
Inclusion support (Blackmarston School)
Specialist Advisory Teachers
Equipment specialists – to advise on and adjust specialist equipment